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Lost in translation?
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We
are absolutely certain that no “boys own” story comes close to the real life
exploits of one of our staff, Mr A H Birse CBE. In terms of life experience and loyal service
to at least two major world powers, Mr Birse really has seen it all. Normally, rising to the position of Foreign
Manager of the Bank would be a tremendous achievement on its own, but really
it is just a sideline for Mr Birse, who numbers Winston Churchill and Stalin
among his close acquaintances. We
assess his “story so far” just after the end of World War II, when he
featured in the article below, published in Martins Bank Magazine.
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Mr A H Birse C.B.E.
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The appointment on July 1st of Mr. A. H. Birse as
Foreign Manager of the Bank in succession to Mr. E. B. Babcock, who has
retired on pension, is one of unusual interest, for no other member of the
present staff of Martins Bank can claim to have had a career so varied and of
such absorbing interest, as the photographs which follow show. Mr. Birse was born
in Russia in St. Petersburg,
now called Leningrad, and received his
education at a Russian public school.
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He commenced his business career there in 1906 in the office of
the representative of the well-known firm of merchant bankers, Baring Bros. & Co. In 1917
he returned to this country to join the Artists Rifles, and was later commissioned
to the Intelligence Corps with the rank of Captain. Upon demobilisation he took a post with the British
Overseas Bank, London, in 1920. The following year he went to Poland as
Sub-Manager of their Warsaw subsidiary. In 1925 he left them to take up the
post of Assistant Manager of the Milan and Genoa branches of the Banca Italo
Britannica. In 1928 he joined the Chemical Bank & Trust Co., London, as
Assistant European Representative. Two years later he went to Antwerp to join
a company in which his old firm, Baring Bros. & Co. were interested.
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In 1932 he joined the
Amstelbank in Amsterdam, being appointed by a group of British Bank creditors
to attend to the liquidation of this concern. He joined Martins Bank in 1936
as Assistant Manager in London Foreign branch. But the most spectacular part of his career was still to
come. As an accomplished linguist, and in particular as a fluent speaker of
the Russian language and expert on Russian affairs, he became during the second world war, after service in the
Intelligence Corps in Egypt and the Military Mission in Moscow with the rank
of major, second Secretary to the British Embassy in Moscow and personal
interpreter to the Ambassador, Lord Inverchapel.
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At Potsdam in 1945 © Keystone Press Agency
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Arising from this he acted as interpreter to Mr Churchill and Mr
Eden at the Moscow Conference in October, 1943; at the Teheran Conference in November, 1943; at the
Moscow conference in October, 1944; and at
the Yalta Conference in January, 1945.
Mr Eden made a personal request to the bank for the services of Mr Birse
at the Moscow Conference of 1944. He also acted as interpreter at the prolonged Armistice negotiations with
the satellite countries in Moscow during
September and October, 1944.
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In April, 1945, he accompanied Mr. Eden to San Francisco, and in
July he was in Potsdam, acting as interpreter to Mr Churchill, Mr Eden, Mr
Attlee and Mr Bevin. All these duties
were of a most exacting and arduous nature, involving sixteen hours a day,
and often more, for days on end.
For his services he received the C.B.E. from our ambassador on
behalf of H.M. the King, and the Order of the Red Banner of Labour from the
President of the U.S.S.R.
Last year he travelled all over the United
States and part of Canada visiting our correspondents and accompanied the
Chief General Manager Mr J M Furniss, on a trip to North America.
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With Mr and Mrs McKendrick at Niagara
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© gut informiert 2007 to date
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